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China passes new law to tighten controls on Internet

December 28, 2012 18:55 IST

China on Friday tightened control over Internet usage making it mandatory for the users to register with their real names with the service providers, belying expectations of opening up after once-in-a-decade leadership change.

The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress -- China's Parliament -- has approved the draft stating that it was aimed at protecting personal information, state-run CCTV reported.

While critics slammed it as an attempt by the government to reinforce its controls on the Internet, especially the burgeoning social media through Chinese Twitter, Weibo, the government defended it as measure to protect the privacy.

Some reports claim that the identity management policy will discourage online muckrakers who have worked to expose corrupt government officials in recent years, a commentary in state-run Xinhua news agency said.

Many service providers already maintain similar requirements. China Telecom, China Mobile and China Unicom, China's three biggest telecoms companies, have required individuals and enterprises to provide their real names when subscribing to data transmission services since September 2010, it said.

Sina

Weibo, a popular microblogging site that has been used by netizens to blow the whistle on corrupt officials, has required users to register with their real names since earlier this year, it said.

Twitter and Facebook are banned in China but the number of Chinese microbloggers, akin to Twitter this year crossed 274

million mark, the largest in the world as Internet medium has emerged as the main stay of public expression in a tightly controlled official media set up in China.

According to China Internet Network Information Centre, 274

million Chinese people had microblog accounts as of June this year.

The number of Internet users in China rose to 538

million by the end of June, meaning that four out of ten Chinese access the Internet, the CINIC report said.

It is estimated that by 2015 China will have more than 800

million Internet users, one quarter of which will be from rural areas.

The

new law is intended to better protect Internet users' privacy and provide a legal basis for safeguarding online information safety to ensure the healthy and orderly development of the Internet, a spokesman of the NPC said.